CTM Festival
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CTM Festival

The annual CTM Festival (from 1999 to 2011 called club transmediale) is a music and visual arts event held in Berlin, Germany. Founded in 1999, the festival originally focused on electronic music, but has since evolved to cover a wide range of genres under the banner "Festival for Adventurous Music and Art".

Changing through various shapes and formats over the years, the festival currently takes place as a 10-day long event in which the music program is supplemented by an extensive daytime program of workshops, art installations, panel discussions, screenings and presentations that illustrate the latest artistic, technological and economic developments in music and media cultures.

Distinguishing the festival from many others in its field is the fact that CTM spotlights music’s social role in electronic and digital culture. Through the festival, as well as various events curated by CTM throughout the year, the organization reflects the latest musical currents against a backdrop of new technologies, modern art, historical perspective, and social issues.

The first festival was founded by five friends: Marcus Weiser and Lillevan Pobjoy of the electronic music duo Rechenzentrum, visual artist Timm Ringewaldt, photographer and lighting engineer Remaclus "Remco" Schuurbiers and experimental media design student Jan Rohlf. After the first edition in 1999, Lillevan Pobjoy and Tim Ringewaldt left. In 2000 the festival was organised by Marcus Weiser, Remaclus "Remco" Schuurbiers and Jan Rohlf. Oliver Baurhenn, who joined the core team in 2002, was part of the organising team in 2000.

In its early years, CTM was deeply embedded in Berlin's changing club culture, reflecting the energy of the post-reunification period and the city's vibrant underground music scene. The first edition in 1999 took place at Maria am Ostbahnhof, a venue that had only opened a few months earlier. Located in a disused GDR post office building at the Ostbahnhof, Maria quickly established itself as an important venue for experimental electronic music, attracting an audience keen to explore the boundaries between club culture, sound art and audiovisual performance. The raw industrial environment, with its exposed concrete, glass staircase and DIY aesthetic, provided an ideal backdrop for CTM's exploratory ethos.

For its second edition in 2000, CTM took an unexpected turn, moving out of Berlin's clubs and into a high-rise on Alexanderplatz, one of the city's most famous but notoriously boring public spaces. The festival was housed on the seventh floor of the Haus des Lehrers, a GDR-era office building with a huge socialist mural on the facade. The empty, fluorescent-lit space - originally intended for bureaucratic work rather than hedonistic sound experiments - was transformed into an ephemeral festival venue, offering a panoramic view of the city skyline at night. The contrast between the austere, functionalist architecture and the festival's immersive, energetic programme made for a particularly powerful experience.

In 2001, however, CTM did not take place. At the time, the festival was still closely linked to transmediale, which had been its institutional umbrella. That year, transmediale faced severe funding problems, forcing it to scale down. Since CTM relied heavily on its support, it had to skip a year - an absence that underlined the precarious nature of Berlin's independent festival landscape at the time.

When CTM returned in 2002, it did so in an almost mythical location: E-Werk. The cavernous former power station was one of the most legendary clubs of Berlin's early '90s techno movement, hosting nights that became the stuff of legend. By the time CTM arrived, however, E-Werk was no longer the epicentre of hedonism it had once been. The original clubbers had long since moved on, and the space lay abandoned, its towering halls and vast dance floors eerily silent. This gave CTM the chance to reclaim it as a temporary playground for experimental sound, filling its empty chambers with radical performances, bass-heavy frequencies and site-specific installations.

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